Spinal cord reserve in multiple sclerosis

Author:

Sastre-Garriga JaumeORCID,Rovira AlexORCID,García-Vidal Aran,Carbonell-Mirabent Pere,Alberich Manel,Vidal-Jordana AngelaORCID,Auger Cristina,Tintore Mar,Montalban Xavier,Pareto Deborah

Abstract

BackgroundThe spinal cord (SC) is a preferential target of multiple sclerosis (MS) damage highly relevant towards disability. Differential impact of such damage could be due to the initial amount of SC tissue, as described for the brain parenchyma (brain reserve concept). We aimed to test the existence of SC reserve by using spinal canal area (SCaA) as a proxy.MethodsBrain sagittal three-dimensional T1-weighted scans covering down to C5 level were acquired in 2930 people with MS and 43 healthy controls (HCs) in a cross-sectional, multicentre study. SC area (SCA) and SCaA were obtained with the Spinal Cord Toolbox. Demographical data and patient-derived disability scores were obtained. SC parameters were compared between groups with age-adjusted and sex-adjusted linear regression models. The main outcome of the study, the existence of an association between SCaA and Patient Determined Disease Steps, was tested with scaled linear models.Results1747 persons with MS (mean age: 46.35 years; 73.2% female) and 42 HCs (mean age: 45.56 years; 78.6% female) were analysed after exclusion of post-processing errors and application of quality criteria. SCA (60.41 mm2vs 65.02 mm2, p<0.001) was lower in people with MS compared with HC; no differences in SCaA were observed (213.24 mm2vs 212.61 mm2, p=0.125). Adjusted scaled linear models showed that a larger SCaA was significantly associated with lower scores on Patient Determined Disease Steps (beta coefficient: −0.12, p=0.0124) independently of spinal cord atrophy, brain T2 lesion volume, age and sex.ConclusionsA larger SCaA may be protective against disability in MS, possibly supporting the existence of SC reserve.

Funder

Fondo de Investigación Sanitaria

Agència de Gestió d'Ajuts Universitaris i de Recerca

Biogen

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Neurology (clinical),Surgery

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